Canada adds Russia’s Rosneft, Rostec CEO to sanctions list

Canada has added Russia’s largest oil producer Rosneft, and the CEO of Rostec, to a sanctions blacklist along with 37 Ukrainians and 17 Russian and Ukrainian organizations. They are all covered by economic sanctions and travel bans.

It’s a coordinated move
with the European Union and the United States, who have already
imposed a number of sanctions on Russia, according to Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

“In coordination with our EU and US partners, Canada is once
again intensifying its response to the situation by announcing
further sanctions against Russian and
Ukrainian individuals and entities,” Harper said in a
statement on his official website on Tuesday.

Canada has been trying for months to
resist the pressure on taking any further restrictive measures
against Russia, despite the fact it had already sanctioned 80
Russian and Ukrainian officials last year.Last May,
the country decided not to impose sanctions against
Rosneft and Rostec because it didn’t want politics to hurt
Canada’s biggest business projects.

Russia’s oil giant Rosneft owns about 30 percent of an ExxonMobil
oil field in the Canadian province of Alberta. Rosneft purchased
a stake in the Cardium basin deposit in 2012; the deal became
Russia’s first Canadian presence and was expected to benefit
Canada’s economy by accelerating resource development.

Russian state-owned industrial and defense firm Rostec, and
Canadian plane and train maker Bombardier signed a $3.4 billion
deal two years ago. The companies had decided to establish joint
venture to produce Q400 aircraft, which Canada recognized as a
“landmark opportunity for the Q400 NextGen aircraft
program.” The venture intended to build 24 aircraft a year,
with some 250 constructed by 2030. The deal was postponed last
year due to the anti-Russian sanctions imposed then by the
Canadian government.